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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1977-07-21

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1977-07-21, page 01

PROMCLE
ZjfjAiy Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years ^A^.
LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
1982 VELMA. AVE. - \
COLS. 6, 43211 , EXCM ,
L
VOL.55 NO.29
JULY 21,1977 -AV 6
»
'We Never Lost It'
BUFFALO, (JTAX-The national Christian
evangelical bumper sticker campaign with the slogan "I have found it" has been countered with the Jewish response of "We never lost. it! for "3289 years"'bumper sticker. The Jewish stickers are being distributed here, free, by the Chabad House on Main Street as part of the national Lubavitch cam¬ paign, it was reported in last, week's Buffalo Jewish Review.
The Jewish stickers are black and yellow, the same colors as the evangelical ones, and the words "We never lost it/' are printed inside a Torah scroll:
The phrase, "for
3 U.S. Firms And 2 Banks Deny Participation In Arab Boycott
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 5)
Begin Brings Peace Plan
TEL AVIV-IsraePs Prime Minister Menahem . Begin, gestures while briefing former Prime Minister Golda Meir about his peace plan in Tel Aviv; prior to his departure, for meetings with President Carter. After spending the weekend in New York, Begin began official talks with the President on July 19.
News Service Photo
Illinois Court Rules Against The Nazis
CHICAGO, (JTA) - The Illinois Appeallate Court on July 12 issued a ruling which in effect would halt a pro¬ posed Nazi march in the pre- coinantly Jewish suburb of Skokie.
In both upholding and re¬ versing part of a temporary injunction secured by the Village of Skokie against the National Socialist Party of America, the court said the Nazis could march in uni¬ form, but not while wearing or using the swastika symbol because it constitutes "fight¬ ing words" unprotected by the Constitution.. In effect,, the court upheld a Cook County Circuit Court ruling that the wearing of the swastika could constitute a "grave and serious threat to the peace of the citizens of the Village of Skokie" which include an estimated 7000 survivors of the Holocaust.
Michael Whalen, a Nazi spokesman? said Ihe group1 would not yield on the use of the swastika. He claimed that doing so "would be giv¬ ing up our right to free speech. It distinguishes us from other groups."
David Goldberger, the
American civil Liberties at¬ torney representing the Nazis, said the Appellate Court ruling would be ap¬ pealed.
The court decision specifi¬ cally noted that the ruling did not affect three $kokie ordinances whiqh also would effectively prohibit the Nazis
from marching. The ordi¬ nances include posting a $350,000 bond, obtaining a permit and a ban'on the wearing of military-style uniforms "repugnant", to residents of Skokie. " Jerome Torshen, attorney for Sol .Goldstein, a Holo-
(CONT1NUED ON PAGE 5)
Nazi Efforts Noted Ih Seattle
a local Nazi, John Voorhees, .a student at the university and son.of Donald S. Voor¬ hees, United States-District Court judge in Seattle, placed an announcement in the campus newspaper, "The Daily," which stated: "SS and Nazi Party organi¬ sational meeting will be held July 7 at 8 p.m. to discuss the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
By Avraham Feinglass
SEATTLE,' (JTA) - There has been concern here recently over a proposed "organizational meeting" of the Nazi Party, advertised in the University of Washing¬ ton newspaper on June 30. Local newspapers and tele¬ vision news programs gave the story wide coverage and students at the university staged, an anti-Nazi demon¬ stration on campus July 7.
Apparently fearful of the kind of riots that took place at the KKK rally in Ohio, oh the- Fourth "of July, univer¬ sity officials ■ decided "to postpone indefinitely" any Nazi meeting on the univer¬ sity campus.
The incident started when
NEW YORK, (JTA) - The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) of B'nai B'rith on July 12 revealed that three American corpor¬ ations and two banks named last month by the Arab Boy¬ cott Committee as having submitted proof of compli¬ ance with anti-Israel boycott rules "were being used as in¬ nocent pansies in an Arab propaganda effort to counter the new rU.S. anti-boycott law."
According to Burton M. Jo¬ seph, ADL's national chair¬ man, all five firms — Gener¬ al Electric, General Motors, Westinghouse, Barclays Bank and Bank of America — have informed ADL that they do not discriminate and that they maintain business relationships with both Israel and the Arab world.
The responses came in an¬ swer to the ADL's request for "what documentation, if any" had been submitted to the Arab boycott office in ex¬ change for not being,black¬ listed: It has been announced . af the Arab Boycott Commit? tee conference in Alexan¬ dria, Egypt that Barclays was removed from the blacklist and GE, GM, West¬ inghouse and Bank of Amer¬ ica would not be put on be¬ cause, following warnings, they had given proof of not having business ties with Israel.
Joseph said "the Arabs have often used the blacklist as a propaganda tool. Al¬ though we gave little cre¬
dence to their latest announ¬ cement, ADL queried those named to see if there was - any truth to the Arab Boy¬ cott Committee claims, and we were not surprised when the five firms disavowed the boycott office assertions." Joseph said the ADL will
continue to check Arab Boy¬ cott Committee claims and will also monitor compliance by American firms with the new U.S. anti-boycott law, which carries criminal pen¬ alties for complying with, furthering, or supporting a foreign boycott.
LONDON, (JTA)-The fastest growing, areas of Jewish poverty are not in Third World countries but in the United States, where 10 percent of the Jewish com¬ munity of six million is below the poverty line. This _ emerged from last week's conference of the central board of the World ORT Union. David Young, chair¬ man of British ORT, said that, as a result, the organi¬ zation was broadening the geographical1 scope of its vo¬ cational training programs.
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-The Senate passed a resolu¬ tion July 12 expressing its desire to indicate to the Soviet Union and. other states represented at the Belgrade conference the "official concern of the United States over the treatment of Anatoly Sharan¬ sky, who his been charged with treason, Yuri Orlov and others who sought to monitor compliance with the Helsinki accords." The resolution was sponsored by Senators Edward W. Brooke (R. Mass.), Hubert H. Humphrey (D.Minn.) and Clifford^ Case (R;NJ). "■
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-A delegation from American Arab organizations visited the White House July 12 to urge President Carter to recognize the Palestine Liber-v ation Organization, invite its chief, Yasir Arafat to the White House and to stop "pressing the Arab states to make peace with Israel.". The delegation, headed by Dr. William Small, president of the American-Arab Relations Committee and executivei director of the Federation, was received by William B. Quandt, a staff member of the National Security Council in charge of ..Middle East affairs. The group charged that by re¬ ceiving only Jewish leaders, the President discrimi¬ nated against Arab Americans in favor of American Jews. They asked for a meeting with the President.
Brzezinski Gives Definition Of Peace
' By Trade B. Feidman ■ White House Correspondent
' 'Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles based-on an exclusive In¬ terview with Dr. Zbigniew Brzeiinski In his White House office. The Presi¬ dent's national security adviser granted the in-depth rare intervlew'to
. Trude B, Feidman, our White House correspondent.
TStwta TwmuV T* Tkc £r#te Qwnsk CwHWtuuaj
Place Your New Year Greeting In The
OHIOJE
OMCLE
New Year Edition Seepage 12 For Further Details
WASHINGTON, D.C.- Dr." Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter's national security adviser, jsaid that peace in the Middle East will require more than just the end of belligerency.
."Real- peace," he said, "has to mean mutual recog¬ nition of the permanence of a settlement, mutual recogni¬ tion of the existence of the parties to that -settlement, the undertaking of a compre¬ hensive political, diploma¬ tic, commercial anl social relationships, and so forth.
"In other words, peace is not just the formal absence of war, but it's the reality of historical cohabitation in a single region. It is the accep¬ tance of that cohabitation, and it is building on it towards more co-operative collaborative relationships."" . . Dr. Brzezinski is. the first American official to spell out his definition of the kind of peace that must be worked
out in the Middle East in or¬ der to end the current crisis! In a rare, exclusive inter¬ view — the first he has given on the Middle East crisis — Dr. Brzezinski also discus¬
sed territorial borders, as well as the concessions by both sides that he believes are essential to a Mideast peace settlement.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
Presidential National Security Adviser Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski answers crucial questions on the Middle East during a rare, exclusive interview in his White House office-with Trude B. Feidman, our White House correspondent.'
'•_'', photo by Mel Chamowita'
Jiw
; •/ 0/
y
:
. /
w Ti)mwm&.ai*}*fro*

PROMCLE
ZjfjAiy Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years ^A^.
LIBRARY, OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
1982 VELMA. AVE. - \
COLS. 6, 43211 , EXCM ,
L
VOL.55 NO.29
JULY 21,1977 -AV 6
»
'We Never Lost It'
BUFFALO, (JTAX-The national Christian
evangelical bumper sticker campaign with the slogan "I have found it" has been countered with the Jewish response of "We never lost. it! for "3289 years"'bumper sticker. The Jewish stickers are being distributed here, free, by the Chabad House on Main Street as part of the national Lubavitch cam¬ paign, it was reported in last, week's Buffalo Jewish Review.
The Jewish stickers are black and yellow, the same colors as the evangelical ones, and the words "We never lost it/' are printed inside a Torah scroll:
The phrase, "for
3 U.S. Firms And 2 Banks Deny Participation In Arab Boycott
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 5)
Begin Brings Peace Plan
TEL AVIV-IsraePs Prime Minister Menahem . Begin, gestures while briefing former Prime Minister Golda Meir about his peace plan in Tel Aviv; prior to his departure, for meetings with President Carter. After spending the weekend in New York, Begin began official talks with the President on July 19.
News Service Photo
Illinois Court Rules Against The Nazis
CHICAGO, (JTA) - The Illinois Appeallate Court on July 12 issued a ruling which in effect would halt a pro¬ posed Nazi march in the pre- coinantly Jewish suburb of Skokie.
In both upholding and re¬ versing part of a temporary injunction secured by the Village of Skokie against the National Socialist Party of America, the court said the Nazis could march in uni¬ form, but not while wearing or using the swastika symbol because it constitutes "fight¬ ing words" unprotected by the Constitution.. In effect,, the court upheld a Cook County Circuit Court ruling that the wearing of the swastika could constitute a "grave and serious threat to the peace of the citizens of the Village of Skokie" which include an estimated 7000 survivors of the Holocaust.
Michael Whalen, a Nazi spokesman? said Ihe group1 would not yield on the use of the swastika. He claimed that doing so "would be giv¬ ing up our right to free speech. It distinguishes us from other groups."
David Goldberger, the
American civil Liberties at¬ torney representing the Nazis, said the Appellate Court ruling would be ap¬ pealed.
The court decision specifi¬ cally noted that the ruling did not affect three $kokie ordinances whiqh also would effectively prohibit the Nazis
from marching. The ordi¬ nances include posting a $350,000 bond, obtaining a permit and a ban'on the wearing of military-style uniforms "repugnant", to residents of Skokie. " Jerome Torshen, attorney for Sol .Goldstein, a Holo-
(CONT1NUED ON PAGE 5)
Nazi Efforts Noted Ih Seattle
a local Nazi, John Voorhees, .a student at the university and son.of Donald S. Voor¬ hees, United States-District Court judge in Seattle, placed an announcement in the campus newspaper, "The Daily," which stated: "SS and Nazi Party organi¬ sational meeting will be held July 7 at 8 p.m. to discuss the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
By Avraham Feinglass
SEATTLE,' (JTA) - There has been concern here recently over a proposed "organizational meeting" of the Nazi Party, advertised in the University of Washing¬ ton newspaper on June 30. Local newspapers and tele¬ vision news programs gave the story wide coverage and students at the university staged, an anti-Nazi demon¬ stration on campus July 7.
Apparently fearful of the kind of riots that took place at the KKK rally in Ohio, oh the- Fourth "of July, univer¬ sity officials ■ decided "to postpone indefinitely" any Nazi meeting on the univer¬ sity campus.
The incident started when
NEW YORK, (JTA) - The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) of B'nai B'rith on July 12 revealed that three American corpor¬ ations and two banks named last month by the Arab Boy¬ cott Committee as having submitted proof of compli¬ ance with anti-Israel boycott rules "were being used as in¬ nocent pansies in an Arab propaganda effort to counter the new rU.S. anti-boycott law."
According to Burton M. Jo¬ seph, ADL's national chair¬ man, all five firms — Gener¬ al Electric, General Motors, Westinghouse, Barclays Bank and Bank of America — have informed ADL that they do not discriminate and that they maintain business relationships with both Israel and the Arab world.
The responses came in an¬ swer to the ADL's request for "what documentation, if any" had been submitted to the Arab boycott office in ex¬ change for not being,black¬ listed: It has been announced . af the Arab Boycott Commit? tee conference in Alexan¬ dria, Egypt that Barclays was removed from the blacklist and GE, GM, West¬ inghouse and Bank of Amer¬ ica would not be put on be¬ cause, following warnings, they had given proof of not having business ties with Israel.
Joseph said "the Arabs have often used the blacklist as a propaganda tool. Al¬ though we gave little cre¬
dence to their latest announ¬ cement, ADL queried those named to see if there was - any truth to the Arab Boy¬ cott Committee claims, and we were not surprised when the five firms disavowed the boycott office assertions." Joseph said the ADL will
continue to check Arab Boy¬ cott Committee claims and will also monitor compliance by American firms with the new U.S. anti-boycott law, which carries criminal pen¬ alties for complying with, furthering, or supporting a foreign boycott.
LONDON, (JTA)-The fastest growing, areas of Jewish poverty are not in Third World countries but in the United States, where 10 percent of the Jewish com¬ munity of six million is below the poverty line. This _ emerged from last week's conference of the central board of the World ORT Union. David Young, chair¬ man of British ORT, said that, as a result, the organi¬ zation was broadening the geographical1 scope of its vo¬ cational training programs.
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-The Senate passed a resolu¬ tion July 12 expressing its desire to indicate to the Soviet Union and. other states represented at the Belgrade conference the "official concern of the United States over the treatment of Anatoly Sharan¬ sky, who his been charged with treason, Yuri Orlov and others who sought to monitor compliance with the Helsinki accords." The resolution was sponsored by Senators Edward W. Brooke (R. Mass.), Hubert H. Humphrey (D.Minn.) and Clifford^ Case (R;NJ). "■
WASHINGTON, (JTA)-A delegation from American Arab organizations visited the White House July 12 to urge President Carter to recognize the Palestine Liber-v ation Organization, invite its chief, Yasir Arafat to the White House and to stop "pressing the Arab states to make peace with Israel.". The delegation, headed by Dr. William Small, president of the American-Arab Relations Committee and executivei director of the Federation, was received by William B. Quandt, a staff member of the National Security Council in charge of ..Middle East affairs. The group charged that by re¬ ceiving only Jewish leaders, the President discrimi¬ nated against Arab Americans in favor of American Jews. They asked for a meeting with the President.
Brzezinski Gives Definition Of Peace
' By Trade B. Feidman ■ White House Correspondent
' 'Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles based-on an exclusive In¬ terview with Dr. Zbigniew Brzeiinski In his White House office. The Presi¬ dent's national security adviser granted the in-depth rare intervlew'to
. Trude B, Feidman, our White House correspondent.
TStwta TwmuV T* Tkc £r#te Qwnsk CwHWtuuaj
Place Your New Year Greeting In The
OHIOJE
OMCLE
New Year Edition Seepage 12 For Further Details
WASHINGTON, D.C.- Dr." Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter's national security adviser, jsaid that peace in the Middle East will require more than just the end of belligerency.
."Real- peace," he said, "has to mean mutual recog¬ nition of the permanence of a settlement, mutual recogni¬ tion of the existence of the parties to that -settlement, the undertaking of a compre¬ hensive political, diploma¬ tic, commercial anl social relationships, and so forth.
"In other words, peace is not just the formal absence of war, but it's the reality of historical cohabitation in a single region. It is the accep¬ tance of that cohabitation, and it is building on it towards more co-operative collaborative relationships."" . . Dr. Brzezinski is. the first American official to spell out his definition of the kind of peace that must be worked
out in the Middle East in or¬ der to end the current crisis! In a rare, exclusive inter¬ view — the first he has given on the Middle East crisis — Dr. Brzezinski also discus¬
sed territorial borders, as well as the concessions by both sides that he believes are essential to a Mideast peace settlement.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 7)
Presidential National Security Adviser Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski answers crucial questions on the Middle East during a rare, exclusive interview in his White House office-with Trude B. Feidman, our White House correspondent.'
'•_'', photo by Mel Chamowita'
Jiw
; •/ 0/
y
:
. /
w Ti)mwm&.ai*}*fro*